20 THE LAKE SHORE NEWS- FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1923 CAMPAIGN BOOSTS HOME MERCHANTS (Continued from P3ge 17) Stores Aid Community These men are your neighborsâ€"not outsidersâ€"so they know and can speak of its problems with authority. The editor of this newspaper has been chosen their spokesman, and during the coming weeks we will discuss the cause and the cure for what ails us. In another column appear the names of your "partners" who are speaking to you, in these articles. They are the business men of this community, who have confidence in its future; they must have, or they would not back their faith in this place with the investments that they have made, and pay heavy taxes on these investments besides spending large sums every year to maintain the establishments that stand before you and everybody else, here and beyond our limits, as monuments to their implicit confidence that we can and will make good! *. In every movement that has the public benefit for its aim they are the leaders. As has been pointed out their investment is here, so theirs is not a divided allegi- ance?" Everything they have is staked on the future of their community, and with their community they will rise or fall. Has Splendid Future . No community that we know of so much deserves this confidence as ours. This belief on the part of our business men is the cause for one of the biggest booster campaigns this place has known. The home merchants declare that nobody is going to push this community except the citizens themselves. To expect this help from outside is futile. What we have lacked in the past-is united leadership. We may have sus- pected what was needed, but we were not united on just how to go about to secure that need. The merchants are united for the common good. They are working for the interest of all who call this community "home." Cash is the motor that will make our neighborhoodâ€"iorge- to ~4heâ€"ireaUâ€"But not in the way you think. ^You are not asked to part with your money. Not the cash that comes out of your pocket, but the cash that stays there is what will build up this community. How is that? Buying from neighborhood merchants. Kenilworth Happenings 1 MR. and Mrs. C. S. Bartholf, 535 Longwood avenue, Glencoe, an- nounce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Kathryn, to Albert Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Howard Jones, of Woodstock avenue. The wed- ding will take place on Saturday evening, October 6, and will be quietly solemnized in the presence of only the immediate families. Mrs. Henry Taylor, Jr., and Miss Margaret Taylor, 431 Essex road, ar- rive home this week-end from Berkeley, Cal., where they were the guests of Mrs. Walter Gerould. They are return- ing by way of Banff and Lake Louise, and will visit friends in Winnipeg and in Menominee. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Taylor motored to Red Wing Hunting club in southern Illinois • this past week. They are now in their apartment at 1115 Maple avenue, Evanston, after spending the summer with their father, Mr. Henry Taylor, Jr. Miss Kathryn Cooper on her way back to Logan, Utah, from New York city, stopped over for a few days with Mrs. George Keehn and her daughter, Mrs. Reed Landis. Miss Charlotte Eckhart and Miss Mary Gillett arrived home last Thursday from their trip to Europe. Miss Marjorie Oleson and Miss Jean Marx are attending the Country Day school this year. â€"Betty" Jane Breif, ~T*uffi Joyce and Marjorie Maloney- will attend the Mary^ wood School in Evanston this winter. Devoe Paints Wholesaleâ€"PLATE and WINDOW GLASSâ€"Retail Wilmette Glass -râ€"and Paint Works 1193 Wilmette Ave.^"7" Phone WiL 2508 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mackhn and Miss Mary Macklin are now occupying their new home at 535 Warwick road. Miss Elizabeth Stolp, 336 Warwick road, is attending the Northwestern School of Music this winter. Miss Frances Stevens, 330 Abbotts- ford road, leaves today to attend Dana Hall. Mr. Clive Jackson Taylor, 310 Cum- nor road, has been in Madison on a week's business trip. John Cory,of New Jersey, was a week- end guest at the Stevens home on Ab- bottsford road, en route to Madison, to attend the university." Miss Jane Hudson, 58 Warwick road, left Monday to attend the Sacred Heart Academy at Lake Forest. Misses Betty and Dorothy Darling, Marion Calkins, Barbara Holden and Phoebe Hedrick are attending Royce- more school this year. William McClintock, 341 Melrose avenue, left Monday for Dartmouth college, New Hampshire, where he will be a junior. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hannah, 256 Woodstock avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Grant Ridgway, 207 Cumberland ave- nue, leave today to motor to Asheville, North Carolina. Our Boy Scouts Wilmette Troop Activities *J' EVANSTON BUILDING MATERIAL COMPANY EVANSTON, ILLINOIS . Phone Evanston 8906 Simpson St and C & N. W. Tracks BLSeKDlRT and â- â- â- â- <â- â- FILLING Whether jrbur needs are , we areftnow in a position to make promnt4eliverieSi- Lime for the lawn Established 1907 in All Kinds of Building Materials EVANSTON t S IKEtm.WOin'p ' JVILMETTE § WINNETKA ^GLENeOE^^^iSSggE HURRY Send us your old shoes the minute they show signs of wear. They last so much longer if you don't let them get shabby and out of shape. Our work is done so skillfully and neatly, that they look like new. Our shop does fine work, fine work like this because we don't COBBLE shoes, we re- pair them. Hitler's Shoe Store successor to Troop 4 St. Augustine's Church Saturday night, September 15, at 7:15 o'clock, the order "Fall In" was given and Troop 4 officially started for the coming year. As Mr. Herrington was in town, he was present to give a little talk to the Scouts. The evening's activities comprised a series of games, prominent among which was "Spark Plug," a pastime fresh from the southland and introduced to the Scouts by Mr. Herrington. Some boys were divided into groups of owners and horses. The "hosses" were to run around the "race track" to win the champion- ship. It is needless to say that the "hosses" ran on all fours. Each horse had a name, many of the ownerjs Joeing a little hoarse after the race. It is a good game and stout ladies who wish to reduce are urged to try it. * Mr. Leach intends to form a council, which will conduct the business of the troop and examine candidates for the Tenderfoot and Second-Class Badges. This council will be composed of First Class Scouts. The Senior Patrol Leader will preside at the meetings. The election of troop officers will be held either this week or the following. Officers will be elected by popular vote, with Mr. Leach's approval. Troop 4 plans to -present the play "A Strenuous Afternoon," sometime within the next few months. Parts will be as- signed and rehearsals started within the next few weeks. . . . Oh Boy Taffy Apples! f Taffy Apples are Taffy Apples, but Johnnies" are better Get One Before. Going to the Movies You'll Come Back for More re So good that they will melt in your mouth. Only the best eating apples and the finest confection used. Villager Chocolate Shop Village Theatre Lobby C0SMAS BROTHERS RELIABLE MERCHANTS 1153 Wilmette Avenue Phone Wilmette 2694 Opposite Village Theatre HONEST WEIGHT AT ALL TIMES SPECIAL SALE FOR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 . .. #j â- Apples, special by bushel $1.25 Phone Wilmette 2693 Alligator Pears, each......19c Sweet Oranges ........... 719c, 25c, 29c, 50c and*60c Special Grape Fruit^ 4 for 25c Fancy Crab Apples, peck .. 75c Peaches, bushel or crate, low I â- price. Michigan and Concord Grapes, Melons and Pears, Cooking Pears, peck or bushel. We have a special lot for this wdeat exceedingly low prices. ________^_ Fancy Celery, ^ Mushrooms, Watercress, Artichokes, fresh Peasj Radishes, Cucum- bers, at the lowest prices. Hubbard Squash, Spinach, Fresh Beans, Cauliflower, Peppers, Sweet Potatoes, Pickling Onions, Sickle Pears, peck .. . 69c We have never enjoyed better business than in the past few _^weeks; ttoarefw^^^ lapg^ complete stock of all fruils and vegetables.-------^-----â€"â€"â€" â- ^$0&»^?J>^,2.>-V3 ISM ngg my/^/A////////,. I 1 1 1 m ^ifeifegll- Sl^^Sfllliltt; 'MlSb^MsMS£%